Sunday, November 3, 2013

Wayne C. Rogers Reviews Bag of Bones

Bag of Bones

Sony Pictures

Based on the novel by Stephen King

Directed by Mick Garris

Starring Pierce Brosnan, Annabeth Gish and Melissa
George

Review by Wayne C. Rogers

The
mini-series, Bag of Bones, is based
on the Stephen King novel of the same name.
Surprisingly, it took the director, Mick Garris, five long years to get the
financial backing needed to make this adaptation. The project first started out with the intent
of being a feature film, and then over time, the script was rewritten for the
small screen. Thank goodness A&E was
willing to fund this project, or it wouldn’t have happened.

Now, I’ve
been a big fan of Pierce Brosnan since his Remington
Steele days on television. There’s
no doubt in my mind he was the perfect choice for the role of Mike Noonan in Bag of Bones. I’ve seen the strong, dramatic acting
that this man is capable of doing in other films and knew he could handle the
performance without any question. The
fact is Mr. Brosnan has simply gotten better with age.

Was Mick
Garris able to pull off the adaptation from novel to television?

Yes, he was.

Unlike the
previous television networks, A&E gave the director pretty much all the
freedom he needed to make this mini-series a success. True he had a small budget and a tight shooting
schedule, but he got the absolute most out of every dollar spent and each day
on the set. The quality of the cinematography
and production design is certainly much better than in Desperation. There’s also a
touch of class with this production that clearly shines through. Like Pierce with acting, Mr. Garris is simply
getting better as a director with age.

Now, what
viewers need to understand is that Bag of
Bones is not a horror novel, though there are elements of the supernatural
in the story. Stephen King wanted to
write one great book before he turned fifty and Bag of Bones was what he created.
It’s the same with the television movie.
Though there are strong elements of the supernatural in the mini-series,
it’s not really a horror movie.

The TV movie
centers around successful Maine author, Mike Noonan (played by Pierce Brosnan),
who experiences a mind-numbing tragedy when his wife, Jo, is unexpectedly
struck by a bus while he’s autographing novels across the street in a
bookstore. Annabeth Gish (I remember her
in the television series, Flash Forward) plays
his lovely wife. The movie has to
establish rather quickly just how much the two of them are in love with each
other, and I think it succeeds. You
could see these two people together, enjoying their lives with each other. That makes the death of Jo more shocking and
disturbing for those who haven’t read the novel.

Pierce Brosnan performed a magnificent scene
when he found his wife lying in the street dead. Anyone who has ever lost a loved one will see
the grief etched on his face as clearly as day.
I don’t think he was acting here, but rather displaying the actual grief
he’d felt when losing his first wife to cancer.
I mean the scene made me cry. I
knew what he was going through, and I believe that’s when I truly bonded with
the character.

The plot
point that propels the story forward, however, is when Mike Noonan discovers his
dead wife was pregnant. Since Mike
couldn’t have children because of a low sperm count, he begins to suspect Jo of
having had an affair with someone. Jo
had also been spending a lot of time at their summer house on Dark Score Lake. Over a period of time, Mike begins to wonder if
that’s where her lover lives and decides to visit the place for an extended
period. The time frame was much longer
in the novel. I think it was a couple of
years. It’s also important to note that
since Mike was a fast writer, he had several novels stashed away in a safety
deposit box in the novel version. In the
movie, however, he only had one old trunk novel that he gives to his agent and
publisher to keep them happy while he’s unable to write.

Once Mike
arrives at his house on a lake, he soon finds himself involved with a young
lady and her daughter (Mattie & Kyra Devore played respectively by Melissa
George and Caitlin Carmichael). Mike
manages to save Kyra’s life by pulling her out of the highway before she can be
hit by a car. After he does this, he quickly
finds out that Kyra’s grandfather is Max Devore, the most powerful man in the
region. Max is attempting to get custody
of Kyra by claiming Mattie is an unfit mother.

Since Mike
Noonan has problems of his own to deal with, he really doesn’t want to get
involved in Mattie’s situation. Things,
unfortunately, don’t work out as he desires.
When old-man, Max Devore (played by William Schallert—no, not Captain
Kirk) pressures him to testify in front of a paid-off court official about the
traffic incident, Mike takes Mattie’s side to piss the man off. Of course that makes an enemy of Mr. Devore
and his female assistant, Rogette Whitmore (played by Deborah Grover). The assistant seems to be even more evil than
the old man.

While all of
this outside stuff is going on, Mike is experiencing supernatural events at his
house on the lake. He knows his wife is
there with him, but there’s also another spirit, Sarah Tidwell, who wants him
to seek revenge for her death.

In time,
Mike discovers that Tidwell (played by the lovely and talented Anika Noni Rose)
was murdered in 1939. That’s when all
hell begins to break loose and Noonan finds out things about his own family’s
past and how it ties into the singer’s death and Max Devore’s unusual family
tree.

As I said
earlier, Bag of Bones isn’t a scary
novel and neither is the movie. Director
Mick Garris throws in some supernatural aspects regarding Mike Noonan’s dreams
about his wife and Sarah Tidwell, the spirits in his summer house and how they
often communicate with him by ringing a bell that’s hanging from a moose’s head
over the fireplace. There’s also a very strange
looking tree near the lake that’s shaped like a woman’s body and offers a jolt
or two in the show. In many ways, the novel
and mini-series are actually about Mike Noonan coming to grips with his own
grief over the death of his wife, the past that catches up to him by the end of
the movie, and how his family inadvertently brought on some of the tragedy he
experiences. In the book, he falls in love
with Mattie Devore, but not so in the movie.
She’s simply a piece of the bizarre puzzle that deals with Sarah
Tidwell.

I feel that Mick
Garris did a fantastic job on condensing a long novel into a two part
mini-series, not to mention the great cinematography and set decoration in Nova
Scotia that makes it look like Maine. I
thought most of acting was top notch, especially with regards to Pierce
Brosnan, who had to carry most of the film on his shoulders. I have to admit that Deborah Grover as
Rogette Whitman gets the trophy for the creepiest performance. Whenever she was in a scene, she pretty much
stole it from the rest of the actors with her strangeness. She needs to play in more horror movies.

One last thing
I enjoyed was Matt Frewer performing as Mike Noonan’s brother. I kept thinking I knew Matt from
somewhere. It turns out he played the
Trashcan Man in The Stand mini-series.
During that series, he shot a scene in the old Stardust Hotel in Las
Vegas, where I was working at the time.
This is a very talented actor who needs more roles offered to him.

There isn’t
much in the way of extras, other than some deleted scenes. Still, the DVD is perfect for the Stephen
King collector who wants to have all of the author’s movies on disc.

Wayne C. Rogers is a Las Vegas casino employee who has been writing professionally (with the intent to sell) for twenty-five years. It's only been within the past three years that Mr. Rogers (no, not the famous TV host of programs for children) made the decision to work towards being a full-time writer of horror, suspense, psychological, and erotic horror fiction.

He has written several novellas (three of which are posted on Amazon's Kindle), dozens of short stories (some of which are also on Amazon), an erotic/horror novel--The House of Blood--for the wild crowd that lives on the kinky side of reality, and five completed screenplays based on his stories The Encounter, The Tunnels, A Step in the Shadows, Trick or Treat, and The Garbage Disposal (the last three are short screenplays). He is currently at work on a sixth screenplay, The Code of Honor, as well as a seventh, Dolan. During the year of 2012, Mr. Rogers sold over twenty short stories with some of them appearing in the paperback anthologies: I'll Never Go Away, Grindhouse and Peep Show, Volume 2.

Being somewhat of a couch potato at his old age of sixty-two, Mr. Rogers enjoys the pastime of writing, reading (he has over a few hundred books stored in boxes a few feet from his writing table), great movies from any time period, and well-made television programs such as Justified, Mad Men, Breaking Bad, The Game of Thrones, Justified, and American Horror Story. Finally, Mr. Rogers is rather unusual in that he doesn't own a house or a car, A friend just recently bought him a cellphone, but he hasn't turned it on as of yet. He spends his free time at the computer writing his stories, and usually doesn't leave his apartment till it's time to head to work. Thank God for ham & cheese sandwiches and chicken noodle soup!!!